tv CNN News Central CNNW March 29, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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call now >> this is cnn. >> the world's news >> fundraiser face off former president trump's campaign betting that it can top biden's record setting night in new york with its own event. but can republicans match? this show of unity that we saw last night? it trio a president setting the stage for a serious fight and kremlin crackdown is a wall street journal reporter, marks one year in russian detention on sham espionage charges, were hearing word that moscow has just arrested six more journalists in the span of a few hours and queen, be sure
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knows how to create some buzz. beyond saves new album doesn't just have people singing why her trackless is sparking >> a whole conversation following these major developing stories and many more, i'll coming in right here to cnn news central >> counting the cash that is the stage of the 2024 campaign that we're in right now after president biden enlisted his two democratic predecessors for last night's event that raised a record $26 million that's more than former president trump raised all of last month with that high-dollar count and high-stakes, some low blows. here's one clip released by the biden campaign donald trump as far as we can tell, has just been trying to win a third championship, but his own golf course >> my question >> to you, sir, can voters trust a presidential candidate who is not won a single trump
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international golf club trophy at long last, sir, have you know, chip shot? >> we'll look i'd be happy to play. >> i told him once before >> when he came into the oval, when he was being is before you go sworn in? i said i'll give you three strokes if you carry your own bag >> well, as of last count, biden has more than doubled the former president's cash reserves. trump hopes to chip away at that lead with a florida event next week that could bring in $33 million cnn's kayla tausche is at the white house for us. kayla, there were no press cameras at the fundraiser. we should be clear about that. so of all the moments, why did the campaign release that golf club? >> rionda campaign has been seeking to build this election as a study in contrast, on one hand the president, president biden focused on governing on the other hand, and they're telling you have a former president who is toggling between the courtroom and the golf course, and they've been
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highlighting this contrast for several weeks now with president biden, take a sharper attack against his republican rival, even saying on twitter, a sarcastic congratulations to donald trump when he sent out a message about winning all of the golf tournament instead, he had one at his various resorts. so certainly this was a common refrain from the biden campaign and they take every opportunity they can to show the president in a jovial an upbeat mood. but there were also some more serious moments in the conversations. there were no press inside, there were no cameras that the press were allowed to have inside. but in speaking, to attendees, there were some moments where president clinton, i'm told talked about how the economy was very good under president obama and president trump has been allowed to take credit for that, and that he will likely take credit or attempt to take credit for president biden's historic job creation in his first term. and there was also quite a bit of conversation about the stakes in the race, which has been a recurring theme from the biden campaign. and here's one of those
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additional clips on that topic >> a real inflection point in history, things are changing. this guy denies there's a global warming this guy wants to get rid of not only roe v. wade, but which is pre-prep brags about having done he wants to get rid of the ability of anyone anywhere in america had ever choose. all the things he's doing or so speaking oh, little old and out of shape. but anyway, an applause line there from president biden. but of course, a very friendly audience, liberal democrats paying high dollar tickets. several thousand of them in a sold-out radio city music hall last night, brianna yeah, friendly audience in quite the show of unity, which trump would find very hard to duplicate. of course, it would be impossible for him at the same time, the biden campaign
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was contending with his huge protests that was going on outside of radio city that we really couldn't avoid seeing it >> you couldn't avoid seeing the protest outside and there were also about a dozen protesters inside that we're sort of heckling the president. and according to the attendees that i spoke with stephen colbert are used that moment. to ask the president about his position on the middle east. and i'm told he received a standing ovation for the answer that he gave that he talked about the fact that october 7 was a massacre, that it was undeniable, but that it didn't mean that your heart couldn't break for the suffering that's taken place in gaza since then, he advocated, yet again, a two-state solution. and i'm told you got a standing ovation for that response, but certainly brown and this is going to be a recurring theme for the next few months on the trail >> certainly, kayla tausche, life-force from the white house. thank you. and let's bring in cnn's senior data the reporter, harry enten. now, harry money-wise biden is seriously ahead of trump pulling wise. it's a different
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story. tell us where things stand >> yeah, it's a very different story. you look at those money numbers, you think joe biden was running away with this race? but >> take a look here. this is the choice for president. will look now, right? we got no clear leader, but donald trump at 47%, joe biden, that just 44% compare that to where we were four years ago at this point, what a different picture, joe biden was clearly leading in that campaign, 50% to 43%. he never trailed during the course of the 2020 campaign. and now we're in a situation in which we're in a very tight race, although trump with a nominal advantage, 47, 44% now, i will note that obviously we have trump versus biden, but we also have some third-party candidates. so here's the two-way race, right? trump 44. >> and then >> we have biden at 43% in my own average of polls. and now and we're looking here at the third party candidates. and what do we have? we have trump at 41 by net 38. and then look rfk at 13%. but the fact is there's no real difference that's going on here. there's this whole idea that rfk may in
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fact make a major difference in this campaign. but what i'm seeing right now is that it's basically the same campaign, even if kennedy is pulling 13% of the vote quite a significant share for a third party candidate. in fact, the highest polling third-party candidate, this point, dating back since ross perot in 1,996? >> yes. still seven months to go. how much can think shift? >> yeah. how much could sing shift, you know, it turns out there's a calendar that we have to all pay attention to and right now, obviously we have biden and trump in a race in which there's no clear leader, a very, very tight race, right things can definitely shift. look at where we are, how far the polls have been off at this point from the eventual margin since night 1972, the average and the average election cycle, the polls have an off by an average of six point. look at the biggest difference are 21 point difference. jimmy carter was blowing ronald reagan out of the water at this point in 1,980, blowing him out of the water. and yet, of course, ronald reagan easily won that
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campaign. so the polls can definitely shift yet at this particular point, you have to say that it is advantage trump because we talked about the popular vote. but of course it's the electoral college that really matters. so here's the race to t2 70 based on recent polling and pass results. look at this, trump is ahead. he would win at this particular point with 283 to joe biden's 225 with trump flipping sub-states this point michigan, where he leads nevada, where he leads arizona, where he leads, and georgia release all states that joe biden carried last time around. but now if you're looking at that state polling, it's a completely different picture which matches what we're seeing nationally with joe biden. in fact, probably trailing donald trump at this particular point compared to that four years ago, we're of course, job joe biden had a clear advantage throughout the entire campaign. >> yeah, a lot can change. you said 1,980, harry, that was kind of fight. >> i like doing that. i liked doing that. it makes me feel young. i think it makes some people feel all dinos, sara sidner feels all because but it makes me feel young when i'm able to say 1,900. yes.
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>> i was born in 1,980. you made me feel very old, so thanks >> brown. she ate it >> all right. kristen all right. now, the painstaking cleanup >> of the francis scott key bridge is ramping up. and here you can see a heavy lift crane at the disaster site, but even more powerful help us on the way. >> this is video >> of the largest crane on the east coast, the chesapeake 1,000 arriving in baltimore this morning and it set to join this really complex task of removing 4,000 tons of twisted metal and other debris that's blocking the port. meanwhile, you have baltimore's mayor saying that he's hopeful that crews are going to be able to find the remains of those for missing bridge workers who are presumed dead. after tuesday's collapse officials say they've detected a larger size vehicle somewhere under the water, but it's buried under mounds of debris cnn's gabe cohen joins us now. so gabe, you've been here from the very beginning
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just tell us a little bit more about what you're learning about this delicate salvage operation as these big cranes move in >> yes. a christian we've learned that that first heavy lift crane vessel, the largest on the east coast has arrived here at the wreckage site. we were told by an official at the command center that they were hoping to get it operational later today. so a good start that work of code wearing some of the debris, but that timeline is really fluid at this point, we understand two more, at least of those vessels are coming to the scene as we speak, that according to the transportation secretary, pete buttigieg. but this is going to be a tall task. engineers are still trying to figure out how they're going to cut all of that steel and concrete into smaller pieces so they can actually remove all of that to be debris from the river and look, they're going to have to do this really carefully, delicately and sensitively because there are concerns that those four missing construction
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workers maybe buried underneath some of that rebel. and once this operation is complete, they're hoping that they can send divers back down to recover them. so they can bring some closure to their families. so the more that we go through this process, it does seem like this could take days, if not weeks. kristin, meanwhile, the port of baltimore seems to to be almost shut down with thousands of jobs at risk potentially millions of dollars in a hit to the local economy here in baltimore between salaries and business operations. so this is a major step forward with this crane arriving. but look, the scale of pulling all of that debris out and then moving that ship, which is about the size as are the eiffel tower just on its side. it could take quite a long time >> yeah. the amount of metal that needs to be moved is just it's hard to wrap your mind around. gabe cohen. thanks so much. cnn's danny freeman is also in baltimore and he joins us now live and we understand that there's gonna be a news conference soon to honor some
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of the victims. is that right? danny yeah kristen that's right. and just about an hour, we're gonna have a press conference. like you said, honoring the victims, those construction workers who were on the bridge when it collapsed earlier this week, that news conference is going to be held by casa. it's an organization that provides aid to immigrant families to latinos as well. and they will also have at this press conference, other construction workers from the maryland area, goo plan to stand in solidarity with those who were lost. kristen, i want to also say we're we're learning more identities of some of the six victims who are feared to either be presumed dead are already been found dead. first, there's maynor yassir suazo sandoval mentioned him he's from honduras. we spoke to his brother earlier this week miguel luna from el salvador lived in maryland for 19 years. he was actually a member of that organization, casa. and then the new name that we learned over the past 24 hours is jose mynor lopez,
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also a husband and a father. and then the two people who already have been recovered, they were pulled from a pickup truck down underneath that wreckage of the bridge were dorlian castillo cabrera, and alejandro hernandez fuentes. but kristen, i just want to say there have also been storing he's of two survivors who managed to be on that bridge and come away with their lives. the governor of maryland, wes moore, he actually described a conversation that he had with one of those survivors let's take a listen to how he characterized that conversation >> one of the survivors who i had the opportunity to speak with one of the things he mentioned to me was as he was moving off of the bridge and literally saw the bridge fall right after he moved off. it was because there was a first responder who was telling him to move off often the bridge >> again, kristen, just to remember as gail mentioned, part of the main reason why this crane is here is not just to get ships moving yet, it's
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the get that wreckage off of the areas that divers can go back, try to find those four remaining victims stems and hopefully bring closure to some of these families. kristen >> all right. we'll wait to hear what's happening at that news conference, which should be getting underway soon. danny freeman. thank you. >> we'll still ahead. >> russia arrests more journalists >> as wall street journal reporter, evan gershkovich marks one year in detention. president biden is just issued a new threat to moscow, plus how a crumbling insurance market is pricing people out of their homes as companies pull out of entire states refusing the company for anyone, there and fish in the florida keys are spinning in circles until they die. >> what could be >> causing this bizarre behavior? here >> these stories and more coming up this >> our on cnn news central us didn't check. >> we hear nothing. >> the space shuttle accident,
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discover your heritage, preserve your traditions represented. all that makes you i'm, paula reid in washington, and this is cnn >> today marks one year since wall street journal reporter evan gershkovich was detained in russia and accused of espionage. a charge that gershkovich, his paper and the us government meant all strongly denied right now diplomats are working behind the scenes to get him released, possibly part of a prisoner exchange a kremlin spokesperson made a vague statement saying that certain contacts are ongoing, but really gave no other details the wall street journal mark today's anniversary by leaving this just gaping, blank space on its front page, really representing how much of his work and his life have been stolen the headline reads in part his story should be here. crime, journalism. so let's talk to cnn's kylie atwood today secretary of state antony
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blinken called for gershkovich to be released immediately >> president biden's vowing to keep pushing to bring them home but what is the white house saying on this one-year anniversary? >> will president biden put out a >> statement this morning calling this anniversary, particularly painful, and he went on to talk about his conversations with evans family to shone a light on how much effort he continued he was to put into trying to secure evans release. i want to read to a part of that statement. he said shortly after his evans wholly unjust an illegal detention, he drafted a letter to his family from prison writing, i am not losing hope as i have told evans parents, i will never give up hope either. we will continue working every day to secure his release. now, what we know is that in december there was according to the state department, a new insignificant offer that the us put on the table for evan and also paul whelan, another american who's been wrongfully detained in russia for more than five years here's now, that proposal was rejected by
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russia. the state department this week, not updating us as to if there had been any other back-and-forth since that rejection by russia. but interestingly enough, earlier this week we heard from the special so envoy for hostage affairs, roger carson's he spoke with our colleague christiane amanpour he said that he's actually hopeful about the next 90 days because russia has actually just pushed forward this pretrial detention for another 90 days. he's thinkers possible that russia's sees a possibility of coming to an agreement to secure evans released before a trial actually begins. we'll just have to watch him so there's definitely hope and they're hopeful. but as you were saying, i mean, this week moscow lengthened his detention until i guess that would be june 30th. so what can you tell us about that? >> that's right. so what the us thinks is that when that trial akre to be gins, it'll be harder to come to an agreement. so that's why they see this period of time as hopeful, but we really don't know the details as to why they're optimistic right now >> okay? kylie atwood. thank
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you so much. >> briana >> we're joined now by jason resign, a columnist for the washington post. he was the newspapers to ron correspondent when he was arrested in 2014. jailed for 544 days, including in the notorious evan prison, before being released as part of a prisoner exchange jason, thank you so much for being with us and for your ten, you'd attention to evan gershkovich's wrongful detention. it's been a full year now. what does that signal to you that it has gone on this long >> well, briana, thanks for you and everybody had cnn for shining a light on evans case, but also paul whelan and the radio free europe journalists, also, corman shaver, who is also being held in russia right now look, i think these anniversaries or grim reminder of an justice against one of our own. i experienced a year marker while i was sitting in prison in iran keeping hope is a really hard thing to do
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because there's really no good news until you get on a plane and come home but i think that the reality is these cases are dragging on a long time. and i think it's just a gentle, just an important reminder that we need to be doing more and more quickly to bring american hostages home wherever they are in the world. >> when you see the pictures that we get to see as he has, these occasional court appearances where they're really just extending his pretrial detention and you see in a way, this look on evans face what are you reading into that almost sort of an inactive, very subtle defiance >> i know that look, i gave that look. evan understands very well that he is being subjected to not only an incredible abuse of power, but a process that's ultimately mentally a sham. >> we
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>> can talk all we want about what prescript pretrial detention means. or if a verdict in this case is going to make it harder for the us government to work out a deal to bring them home. but ultimately, the judicial process is just window dressing evan is a hostage. he knows it very well. and when i see those images of him smirking at the camera i feel a great sense of admiration, respect, and solidarity, and i hope everyone else does as well. >> is the biden administration doing enough to bring evan home and how complicated is this situation to try to get them released >> look, i think that the biden administration deserves credit for bringing dozens of americans home are they doing enough in evans case in paul's case, and in the dozens of other americans who were are being wrongfully detained right now to borrow from what my brother was asked about, the
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obama administration's efforts to bring me home. no, they aren't doing enough because if they were evident be long ago it's not their fault. they didn't create this problem but ultimately, they're going to have to find the missing piece of the puzzle that's going to unlock a deal that will bring it home. and i hope that they're able to do that very quickly. >> yeah, it is. their problem even if it isn't their fault. and we see the front page of the wall street journal today, i'm going to hold up the print version of it so that people can see it. this is it a big hole and it says the story, history it should be here a year in russian prison, a year of stolen memories, joys, and memories. the crime journalism. there's a number of other articles as well, including what evan has lost during his year detained. there's a focus on his family and his friends and what they had been through, what message does that send to the world?
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>> look to me, it's one of not only a that's being perpetrated against this family. and evans entire community, colleagues, friends, but also the resilience of these people. one of the things that evan has been deprived of is seeing his parents and as older sister blossom into incredible advocates for him and other hostages. and i look forward to the de that comes home and i can tell them about the incredible job that they did supporting him and efforts to bring mom we hope that they that day comes very soon, as i know you do jason jason resign. thank you so much for being with us >> thank to you. >> next, how climate change is pricing people out of their homes and suddenly making swaths of the us just completely on affordable. we're going to talk to a real estate guru. josh flag will be with us
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see why comcast business powers more small businesses than anyone else. get started for $49.99 a month plus ask how to get up to an $800 prepaid card. don't wait- call today. 67084780967 ivan 0847 closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com are firm only represents mesothelial of victims and their families. if you or a loved one who has been diagnosed with mesothelioma police now homeowners are sounding the alarm about the skyrocketing costs of home insurance. >> it's especially true for the millions some americans living in areas that are at higher risk for extreme weather. >> the >> us saw a record 28, weather and climate disasters last year alone. i compare that to natural disasters from 1980 to 2023, when the typical annual average for these events was just 8.5. and we're talking everything from beach erosion. so severe that holmes collapsed
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into the seat, collapsed into the sea on the east coast the hurricanes in florida to wildflower at fires and flash floods in california. >> the >> costs of the 2023 natural disasters smashed all previous records with each disaster asked her totaling over $1 >> an >> expert in the insurance industry says, american saw a roughly ten to 12% increase in their homeowners insurance rates joining me now to discuss, is josh flag the star of million dollar listings los angeles >> josh, thank you so much for being with us and >> i'd like to start by just getting your take on which states you think are being hit the hardest right now. and just how high these rates are rising >> well, i can i can't speak to all of the state's, but i can add equivocally, state of california has suffered tremendously. i mean, most of the insurance companies have backed out actually and canceled policies for tons of my clients. clients that live
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north of sunset especially in los angeles, in the baylor area in beverly hills and the hillside areas it's become quite a big problem. and this kind of started with fires, a couple of years ago and it just got worse than is it something you just some people to have to self-insure? you can't even get insurance. it's just a it's insane. >> that's crazy. so i mean, walk us through exactly how these high premiums are affecting your clients is ability to just bind, sell their homes well, i mean, here's the issue, like you know, if you're south of sunset for example, i bring up sunset boulevard because that's where the hillside area starts. if you're in the flats or an areas like that insurance really is not much higher than it used to be. it's actually quite easy to obtain, but for clients that want to be in the areas that are in the hills, it's sometimes i'll have conversations with the middle like, okay. well, we don't want to go into the hills because it's just gotten so
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exorbitantly expensive. i mean, insurance that would have years ago, a couple of years, we'll have been made 20 thousand dollars a year, could be 80 to 100,000 at 100, $120,000. yeah. i mean, it's as much as people are paying and property taxes. >> right? >> eye. so what do you do? i mean, let's say that you're a homeowner with a mortgage. i mean, you can't just complete lately forego insurance, right >> you touched on this, but i mean, what what what do you do >> a lot of people are ensuring the properties for less money than they used to, which is you know, kind of a sucky situation when you have a multimillion-do llar house and you don't want to spend $100,000 a year on insurance, so you just pray that the house doesn't burn down and you ensure it for less than it actually is worth. people self-insure it. there's different ways. i mean there are insurance carriers out there. it's just made it ten times more difficult to do it. and it's just it's really become a disaster. it's somewhat affected the values of
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homes north of sunset. and in the hillside areas not tremendously but it has maybe i shouldn't say affected the values. it's made it a lot harder and takes a lot longer to sell the property >> i see >> so big picture here. where do you think this is all going? do you think it's gonna get worse? i mean, how do you think these climate related insurance hikes? are going to impact the housing market down the road >> you know, i don't think it's going to tremendously affected only because it's something that you just can't. it's nothing you can do about it. you know, it's kind of like with in los angeles, we have like the ulay tax and we have so many different things that have come about. people are still buying houses. i mean, it nothing is going to ever kill a market. it just makes it a lot more difficult and it just adds another wrench and between the ulay tax and now we have a wildlife ordinance interest rates that are higher. it's just the overall it's, it makes
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things more difficult and it makes things take longer to sell. >> but >> luckily, at least in california there's a strong market here and we're not having anything that happened like in 2008 when the market crashed >> yeah. no >> i mean, it's definitely just making it so much more difficult and so much more expensive to buy and sell josh flag. thank you so much for coming on and sharing your expertise with us. we really appreciate it >> thanks >> so coming up, cowboy carter makes its big debut. everything we know about beyonce's foray in the country music, including a beatles cover and a remix of a dolly pardon, classic >> if you work in spaceflight, this is the worst possible thing that could ever happen. >> my dad died doing what he is loved. >> space shuttle columbia, he final flight from your sunday, april 7 at nine on so you know
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>> at morgan stanley old school hardware meets bold new thinking at 88 years old we still see the world with a wonder of new eyes helping you discover untapped possibilities and relentlessly working with you to make the real old school great new world ideas morgan stanley >> i have a question does anyone here try
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litter.com. >> i oversaw alvarez at the white house and this is cnn hold your horses because beyond say just dropped a new album, cowboy carter, who her new work diving deep into the country >> music genre and beyond exploring and reclaiming the rich roots of african american history and its influence in the cowboy culture of the south on the album features a special interlude by the country queen herself, dolly parton as she introduces beyonce's cover of her hit song to lean. here's a little taste hey, ms honeybee, it's dali be you know, that hose you with the good hair you're saying about reminded me of someone on >> you back when oh, my gosh, joining us now, bianchi superfan and cnn anchor viktor blackwell. i am dying over this dolly >> parton interlude where she's talking about bheki with the good hair and likening her to jolene. it's awesome. >> it really is always good to hear from dali p, as refers to
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herself on the album and you don't really, dolly parton, willie nelson. they're both in interludes on this album. i think they're, there just to give the imprimatur from the legends there that they have blessed this project. but when i initially heard texas hold them and 16 carriages, they came out around the time of the super bowl. i expected like a contemporary country album in within those walls. this is not that it plays with folk and pop and r&b and hip hop there's, there's opera on this album. it's really moving between the lines of genre. genres. and she also elevates black country artists, pairs up with some artists who move between genres like post malone on levi's jeans. and this is beyond say with miley cyrus on one of my favorites on this album two most wanted listened yeah, bri
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and kristin, it really is you listening to some of these tracks and saying well, this one sounds country, this wouldn't maybe could be country and pop really playing with the listener to say, do these lines, do these, these titles and genres really matter? >> that's such a great point and you know, speaking of switching genres, one of the songs that's getting a lot of attention viktor, is that cover of the beatles 1968 song, blackbird. let's listen to a quick sample and then i'll get your take on the other side. >> okay >> victor of all the beatles songs. why blackbird and who else is on it >> well, blackbird really is a continuation of the culturally
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conscious music that bianna is made sense lemonade, and 2016, taking history and culture into context here's he chooses this track. paul mccartney says he wrote this in the late 60s, not about a bird, but about a black woman in the context of the civil rights movement. and thinking about the plight of the black woman in america, she then chooses this brings in for black women, country singers, and includes them to sing with her. and in some portions, she's singing without them. it sounds like she's singing to them when she says you were only waiting for this moment to arise, one of those singers, tier kennedy is going to be with me tomorrow morning on first of all, at eight eastern and we'll hear about her experience recording this with beyond say. >> yeah, unbelievable. it's going to be so wonderful to listen to all of it in its entirety. i've not been able to yet. i've been sampling it as i walk through the halls here. but victor, thank you so much. viktor, you look good.
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you're rocking said thank you. i've i found something here. >> you look good and a half my friend >> thanks. >> see you. they do >> so new videos show fish spinning until they die. what scientists think may be causing this sar behavior >> anderson cooper 360 tonight on cnn >> i thought we had a plan for dad. he was set to go to the senior living community, right by my house and her friends suggested i talked to a placed for mom. they really opened my eyes >> my advisor >> listened and understood his needs and showed us options that we're still nearby, but a better fit for dad now he's in. a warm, engaging community with the pick group of friends i know he made the better choice for free senior living advice. go to a place for mom i calm
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spinning in circles until they die and scientists are urgently trying to figure out why the disturbing phenomenon is now putting some endangered species risk of extinction. cnn's bill, we're, is in the florida keys with details >> started diving when i was eight years old with my mom, so i've been in the water for a very long time. >> greg first and worth has seen a lot in his life spent underwater around the florida keys but he'd never seen anything like this >> i noticed the fish were spending and so i started taking video of that that i really had no idea what i was looking at since last fall, he's seen stingrays moving upside down goliath groupers, flailing on their sides and dozens of other species swimming and tortured flailing loops. >> well, i mean, i've said that, you know, it's like i'm in the middle of a disaster movie and i'm that guy yelling from the mountain top, trying to get people to pay attention? >> state fish and wildlife
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officials, and florida's bonefish and tarp and trust have logged nearly 200 incidents with over 30 species acting this way, mostly in the lower keys. but as far north as miami. >> yeah, this is crazy. i was out on a six-hour charter. i had two people on the boat and we were down off a ligament by the bank thank we've happened to see a fish flattering on the flats and then so we got close to him were wants to see if there was a problem and we get obviously tell that he was in distress. >> it turned out to be a soft-ish, a critically endangered species that might lose four or five mature adults a year. but in just a few months, at least 27 and beach themselves or died after intense episodes of what anglers are calling the spin so typically when we think of fish acting strangely are dying, we there think of low oxygen conditions in the water or red tide and so we saw neither at the water school, florida gulf coast university, my parsons team is part of a statewide
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effort to solve the mystery of the spinning fish. and while tests for most toxins have turned up empty the most promising suspect is found living off seaweed at the bottom. a tiny critter named gambia discuss. >> this is the highest we've seen of the gamers to cells of the keys we don't know if it's the main cause the single-cell algae can produce various neurotoxins and it's showing up at record high levels but it's just one more stressor on marine life already reeling from pollution over and off the charts, ocean heatwaves brought by climate change. >> so there's concern and curiosity, i guess on could the hot, hot temperatures in the summer cause some changes that may be led to the fish behavior. now and we just don't really have all the pieces together to try to link one for the other. >> they really have no idea what is happening. there is no concrete conclusive proof of what is happening yet. and that is still to be determined,
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which is quite terrifying. >> it is scary, isn't it? >> it is because if it continues it's going to be the end of this ecosystem. as we know it >> briana, there is a perplexing ecological mystery unfolding down here in the florida keys. what is causing the fish to spin in crazy ways? and dozens of different species people started observing this kind of behavior back in the fall all october, november or so, and they've seen it in pin fish and goliath grouper. and tarpaulin and bonefish and soft fish. the big danger sort of prehistoric looking guy with the funny snout. normally they lose about five of those a year. this year they've lost a couple of dozen. so that's really troubling, giving the low numbers of that endangered species she's and they know it's not red tide. they know it's not >> algae >> blooms that you've seen in years past. it's not man-made pollution in an obvious way, like an oil spill. >> it could be the >> temperature, the ocean
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temperatures are off the charts right now as a result of global warming that could be part of a cat a skating effect. but the number one suspect right now is a tiny little single-cell creature that lives at the bottom of the ocean. each seagrass and different plant life at the bottom called gambia, discuss and it creates a neurotoxin that is caused strange behavior and fish and sort of controlled settings, they're wondering if it's been super charged as a result of the heat. the levels are higher than normal, but nobody knows for sure. and it can take months of scientists are kicking in what they can to figure this thing out right now, there are no warnings against eating florida seafood, no warnings against swimming in these beautiful waters in the keys here. >> but it's >> just one of those odd things like something out of an apocalyptic thriller, whether nature's trying to warn us of something right now. but the secret down here are about is under as much stress as you can
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imagine from all fronts, from chemicals, from human stresses from global warming, all these things. and right now, we're seeing just the behavior that has scientists honestly scratching their heads >> brianna >> there we are. thank you so much for highlighting that problem. we're seeing there in the keys and coming off, we are standing by hi for an update on the baltimore bridge collapse. a press conference expected to begin any minute >> check. >> we hear nothing but space shuttle accidents using not one thing, it's a series of events. >> is that part of the wing? i think the >> space shuttle columbia, he final flight from your sunday, april 7 at nine on cnn. >> okay. everyone our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition are straight energy >> ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein it's two
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